John, I want to clarify something you attributed to me. I did not say that we should avoid debating our understanding. What I said was that endless back and forth over philosophical categories and speculative frameworks leads nowhere, and that Scripture itself should be the ground. I have never suggested that we should not examine one another’s understanding. I simply said that the text must govern the discussion, not the categories we bring to it.
My point was not to avoid discussion, but to keep the discussion anchored in the words God actually gave us. If my understanding is wrong, I want it corrected by Scripture. If someone else’s understanding is wrong, Scripture should correct that as well. So I want to make sure my position is not reshaped into something I did not say. I welcome discussion, but I want it to be Scripture first, Scripture last, and Scripture throughout.
I apologize if it sounded like I was suggesting you wanted to avoid discussion. That was not my intention.
If you and I argue our understanding, what we think is taught by the Bible, then we would simply go back and forth. This is because your understanding and my understanding are subjective.
But we have God's own words. Scripture, not theories (understandings about what any of us think the Bible teaches) has to be our criteria because God's words are objective - they stand when opinions fall.
We test our views, constantly, against "what is written". That is the only true test (if I test my understanding of what I believe the Bible teaches against what I - or others who agree with me - think is thought by the Bible then I have become my own standard.
We, as believers, know not to lean on our own understanding but on every word that comes forth from God.
That is what I thought you meant, and I agree with that standard.
Again, I apologize if it came off like I was saying otherwise. You were right that you and I going back and forth stating our understanding about what passages teach profits little. The only gain is understanding one another, but it does not come close to exploring truth.
My intention is to have a discussion rooted in God's actual words. I believe that God has revealed all there is to know of the Atonement - that what the Bible teaches is what is recorded within its pages.
I want to stick with Scripture (let Scripture interpret Scripture).
I think we can set aside all of the understandings about what is "really" taught and just rest in His words, believe what God has said.
Scripture first, throughout, and last. No external philosophy, opinions of men about what is really taught (those are a dime a dozen).
Let's stick with God's Word. That is why I started out as I did, exploring what God actually said about sacrifices rather than the various ways they could be understood. I think the New Testament, especially Hebrews, does an excellent job explaining.